Rep. Trent Franks decided on his own to lower his profile after he provoked a firestorm by saying it is rare for women to become pregnant as a result of rape, he told CQ Roll Call.

"Here's what I did," Franks told CQ Roll Call on June 20. "When I heard the question was being considered about who to manage the bill, I went to leadership and said, 'Let me make this very easy for you. I want to do what's right for the cause and I think it's very reasonable for women of this conference to take the lead.'"

The choice of Blackburn — who is not a member of the Judiciary Committee — struck critics as a manipulative ploy to score political points after Franks' incendiary comments. No House GOP stalwarts spoke out publicly against Franks, but the decision to exclude him from any participation in floor debate felt awkward at best. Franks sat quietly in the chamber for the entirety of the debate, looking as if he had been placed in the time-out chair.

But Franks said he was glad to step aside to let GOP women take the lead: "I was totally fine with it, because I believe that I was serving the cause the best I could, which is my fundamental purpose.

"I have no doubts the comments would have been a distraction," Franks continued. "But in trying to take away their ability to distract from the issue, I think, was the right thing for the issue, the clarity of the debate and the protection of mothers and their unborn children. ... It was always the intent of our opponents; I just wish I hadn’t assisted them so adroitly."

Asked which member of leadership he spoke to, Franks said it was either Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio; Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va.; or Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.